Web 1.0 (The Static Web) – ~1990-2004
What it was:
The read-only web.
Characteristics:
- Static HTML pages
- No user accounts or interaction
- No comments or social features
Technologies:
- HTML
- Basic CSS
- Early JavaScript
- CGI scripts
Examples:
- Early Yahoo
- Early GeoCities
- Simple company brochure websites
Think of it as:
A digital newspaper – you can read, but not interact.
Web 2.0 (The Social Web) - ~2004-Present
What it is:
The read-write web.
Characteristics:
- User-generated content
- Social media
- Comments, likes, shares
- Real-time updates
- Rich interactive interfaces (AJAX)
- APIs and cloud services
Technologies:
- JavaScript frameworks (React, Angular, Vue)
- AJAX
- REST APIs
- Databases (MySQL, MongoDB)
- Cloud platforms
Examples:
- YouTube
- Wikipedia
Think of it as:
A conversation platform – users create and share content.
Web 3.0 (The Semantic & Decentralized Web) – Emerging
There are two meanings of Web 3.0
1 Semantic Web (Original Web 3.0 vision)
Proposed by Tim Berners-Lee
Goal:
Make the web machine-readable and intelligent.
Features:
- AI understanding content
- Linked data
- Smart assistants
- Knowledge graphs
Example:
- Google search understanding intent
- AI chat systems
2 Blockchain Web3 (Modern meaning)
The decentralized web powered by blockchain
Features:
- Decentralization
- Smart contracts
- Cryptocurrencies
- NFTs
- DAOs
Technologies:
- Blockchain
- Ethereum
- IPFS
- Smart contracts
Examples:
- Ethereum
- OpenSea
- Uniswap
Think of it as:
A web you own – no central authority controlling your data.
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